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  • Vietnam
  • Folder, "[January 20, 1966 - 5:50 p.m. Meeting with Foreign Policy Advisors on Vietnam]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 1
  • development as I may approve from time to time. I have also a:pproved the attached instructions (Tab 2) .to Ambassador Taylor fo:r his use on his return to South Vietnam. Taken together, these documents state my present position. • I consider it a matter
  • of Council of Economic Advisers, Gardner Ackley discussion of all the items on the Social Security Administrator, Robert M Ball agenda, with the exception of at Civil Service Chairman, John Macy discussion by Secy Ball on VietNam David Bell and NATO
  • (during this time about 200 Anti-VietNam pickets were chanting and marching in a roped off area ) Dr. Francis Horn introduced the President Remarks by the President f (the chanting stopped as the President began his remarks -- as the loudseaker system
  • -- then 10 minutes after that, -- BM joined -- discussing staff matters Secy. McNamara Secy. McNamara (b. 1) n *. Vietnam - Re : & resumption of bombing and mtg. this afternoon Joe Califano ^ . \ / Justice Abe Fortas (b. 1) & ( B. ^^ Dr. Walter Heller
  • t rai rainnbegan bega nto to fall fall,, an an dd th thee grou grou p walke walked d throug through h the Ambassador submitted his report on Vietnam March 9, 196 5 White House the house and to the office. Senator George Smathers of Florida Bill
  • Campbel l Secretary Joh n Conno r and Sec y W . Willar d Wif't z ' f T o Cabine t Roo m fo r continuatio n o f meeting o n Vietnam wit h the following : ( Th e Vic e President Genera l Earl Wheeler \ Amb . Henr y Cabo t Lodg e McGeorg e Bund y Amb. Arthu r
  • this for a year and I would then go to Harvard. This was all kind of a package. It was on the basis that I would not receive a presidential appointment and the hell with it. M: Later on at least, if not by then, ISA became sort of a center of dissent on Vietnam
  • their duties the way they saw fit. But I think if you would talk to most members of Congress you would find Mr. McNamara's credit was pretty high right down to the end with one exception, and that is the problem arising over his statements on Vietnam. I think
  • to Vietnam; McNamara's resistance to sending reserve units to Vietnam.
  • yCMI mllllt like to The Nation' ■ Editor• Speak Up on PEACE WITH FREEDOM and "The Silent Center" Editorial Reactioa• to the aewly orsaal ... Cltlsena Committee for PEACE WITH FREEDOM WWRoatow:rln bl Vietnam JNl'OIUU TION COMlmEMD4 I
  • place this month. The fifth report covers the Vietnam protest demonstrations and the Communist Party• s involvement in them. It details current and planned future activities of the Communist Party in their area. The sixth report discusses the April 15th
  • and launched int o a discussion of whether or not we should press for Security Council action on Vietnam, but then returned to explain the devel opment s on the Middle Eas t in New York since July. He concluded by indicating that the non-permanent
  • in the Pentagon. The sense that I had was, and I believe it was the sense of the Pentagon, that right after the election the President would step up our military activity in Vietnam. We were--I think it's fair to say, although you'd really have to talk to McNamara
  • of several natural routes of infiltration into South Vietnam from Laos to the West and North Vietnam itself. Our location denies him easy access to these routes, and forces him to take the long way around. Lastly, Khe Sanh, as you know, serves as a base
  • Vietnam War, 1961-1975
  • ~, tioall7veakened the ability to maintain a-.r stro~ly pro-US orientation. Heutralism in fflailand, collapse in Vietnam, anti-Jaerican election demagoguery in the Pbiltppinea were all developing prior to ov Tisi t. The show of ■ t.rength and sincerity­ to a partly
  • Vietnam
  • -- Lunch or private talks . 3:00 - 4:30 Continue informal working session. (To be largely devoted to discussion ~f world affairs, e.g.,. President could cover Vietnam. Leoni and Lleras Restrepo would talk about . Cuban subversion.) 5:00 - 7:00 Formal
  • to the President with regard to Mansfield's Vietnam opposition. Do you recall this issue? J: Yes, I do. I remember that, and I remember a number of occasions where the President referred to President Ford. On the Mansfield thing, aside from his personal
  • LBJ's opinion of Gerald Ford; Ford's public release of a letter from Mike Mansfield to LBJ expressing opposition to LBJ's decision-making in Vietnam; LBJ's response to criticism of Vietnam decisions; LBJ's determination to win in Vietnam
  • what seemed to me from the very beginning a quite untenable position, primarily because I thought that both the political and physical terrain of South Vietnam were impossible for the effective utilization of the American force and that we should
  • Ball Vietnam memoranda to LBJ; Aceson-Ball plan; senior advisory group (the Wise Men); Clark Clifford as a "dove;" U.S. European policy; Multilateral Force (MLF); Adenauer; DeGaulle; NATO; balance of payments; Dominican Republic; Ball's resignation
  • of Vietnam and he would read the statistics and take it very seriously and wonder if he was making the right decisions. So as I said, in retrospect I guess there were a lot of signs, except that I didn't know how to interpret them. Plus, Lyndon Johnson
  • How Bonanno came to work for LBJ; LBJ's March 31, 1968, speech on Vietnam and LBJ's decision not to seek re-election; foreign response to the speech; Averell Harriman and Cyrus Vance's negotiation meetings with the North Vietnamese; the shift away
  • the prospects of getting involved in the Vietnam War but he never questioned that the nation had to do it, and I think he felt the same way about Castro. Whatever it was we were doing that was anti-Castro, he would continue to support, and it probably took him
  • Vietnam
  • ; discussions on Vietnam; LBJ and Vietnam; incidents preceding and following Gulf of Tonkin incident; Robert McNamara; use of intelligence support
  • -- 4 One, of course, thinks about the generic story of Vietnam, and there was egregious treatment of certain aspects of that story from time to time. I like to think that during that period, that long night of Vietnam, that the rather hostile
  • McCloskey’s work in foreign service and as State Department spokesman; reporters; Vietnam; credibility gap; coordinating briefings with the White House and the Pentagon; new mission of the marines in 1965; withholding information from the press
  • FORM 7122 '(REV. 5-82) NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERV ICE WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUME NT CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE REST R ICT ION D AT E ~48-meffl'O- -tt t ooc nie Fresi deft-t,--+•F~ffi ~ow re-: Vietnam secret
  • . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Mark Hatfield (R., Ore.), disen chanted with New York Gov. Nel- as many pco~le are being afi«;cied He joins the cbrus of party son Rockefeller's mild Vietnam by our ~~bmg as the President faithfuls, already including such J)Olition, is going to speak
  • not persuaded local political leaders were not being cooperative. They were rather passive, at best. There were centers of greater concern to us than others in terms of anti-Vietnam activities. 1 LBJ Presidential Library http://www.lbjlibrary.org ORAL
  • Hubert Humphrey's public appearances after his Vietnam speech in Salt Lake City; avoiding certain campaign areas due to lack of support and negative media there; campaign organization; improving advance work for trips; the campaign status in mid
  • ige1:. a e 3oe1 fm Baig•• a e -cos ts sa:rg&n a e a,o t FILE 8ai:gon LOCATIOH Hilsman, Roger ( Vietnam-Diem ) RESTRICTIOOCODES (A) Closed (8) Closed (C) Closed by Executive Order 11652 governing a=ess to national security infcrmation
  • See all scanned items from file unit "Hilsman, Roger (Vietnam - Diem) (1963)"
  • Vietnam
  • Folder, "Hilsman, Roger (Vietnam - Diem) (1963) [1 of 2]," Country Files, Vietnam, NSF, Box 263
  • Country Files, Vietnam
  • : Lieutenant General Spike Momyer, · Air Force Commander in Vietnam, is in Washington for the Stennis Subcommittee hearings. He is scheduled to testify 'Wednesday morning, the 16th. While he is in Washington, you may wish to have him re port to you
  • confidence with Ambassador Porter. President Park, he felt sure, appreciated that President Johnson himself had troubles with small but vocal elements of the U.S . public and that there were many critics of U.S. policy towards Vietnam who confused some
  • )=>/ (duplicate, #12, NSF, Country File, Vietnam, "7 D (3) News Media Coverage of Vietnam, 4/68-12/68") ~2555 re Panama lp S (duplicate, #89, NSF, Cettn:try File, Panama, Vol. 10) ~~llM----+-___n..u..:wlll!IL.J.U.._JUJ.t:....r::..u;;~.nt, 1p ill7 9 7-131/f.l
  • ~+'--V.~-+f-+:f+r,H',Ff--+----A-. ,a-5·~6 NL.J"qq-1103 [Duplicate of #40a, NSF, Country File, Vietnam, "5D(l), 3/67-1/69, Allies: Troop Commitments; Other Aid (General Material)"] #60 memo Rostow to President, 4:50 ~.m. o,~ Ll J3cJ'l5NL..\ - 0 4 C 1 p
  • " .' '. .' :'. , ,.' · - - -- - -- -- - - - - - THE WHITE HOUSE . WASHINGTON March 11, 196 7 Saturday - 4:30 p. m. FOR THE PRESIDENT I hesitate to belabor you with suggestions about Vietnam. But I feel that everybody on your staff who has ideas about it ought to tell you about them, and :riot somebody
  • ;:, 12 p [Duplicate of #3 la, NSF, Country File, Vietnam, "8 B(3)[B] Bunker Weekly Report to President"] [~anitizee WU CBS 10) o res1 -,ac.-. J-1~1¥ N1-J 'I;,- o>8/ [Duplicate of #2b, NSF, Files of Walt Rostow, "Trip to Soviet Union"] ---,1..e-----='.6
  • i· I1 ~ .,I I J ~ I II J .J J 1 J J r~ ] '.] rT TI w. .lJ I a-_J J ]] [1 i] [l I r· w. J Evidence of heavy infiltration activity into South Vietnam continues to mount. Since 22 March,- several unidentified units of North Vietnam's
  • payments, th e cities , an d VietNam . Wit h respec t t o VietNam , h e looked the m bot h i n the eye s an d sai d tha t w e were ther e t o wi n the wa r an d would . Afte r leaving , bot h Ambs mentioned_to_ _ Jim_Symington that , they wen e impressed b
  • statemen t o n th e signin g o f S. 222 Today issue d statemen t o n th e arriva l toda y o f the 500t h physicia n CKB&&SXXS in Sout h Vietnam, a s a membe r o f the American Medica l Association' s Volunter Physician s fo r Vietna m program .
  • t in VietNam. -- also the text of the memorandum from the President for the three Cabinet Officers and Mr. Shrive r constituting a task force on reducing federal grant-in-aid processing time .
  • The President spend most of lunch kidding Cong Pickle about the golf game and talking about the sermon that Rev. Lewi s gave this morning -- asking i f "we ar e being told the truth about Vietnam. " Walking outside the house w/ Cong . Pickle and Jim Jones
  • , and Judge Moursund On Martin Ranch At Dale Malechek's house Arrived MainHouse Lem Johns Hon. Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. Amb to VietNam Jake Jacobs en - Austin. Tex Departed Main House via car - w/ Mrs. Johnson Judge Moursund, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Krim Arrived
  • General Earle Wheeler McGeorge Bundy George Reed y John McNaughton Re latest incident in Gulf of Tonkin Vietnam In mjdr's room, the President pointed to the headline on the Evening Star, "Secrecy Shrouds Tonkin incident" and said, "Now, Bob, that's what
  • Be Burkley 2:45 6 Pres J g 2 Vietnam